The Foundations of Chemistry

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oxygen are alwayspresent in the same ratio by mass, 11.1% to 88.9%. These observations
allow us to identify water as a compound.

A compoundis a substance that can be decomposed by chemical means into sim-
pler substances, always in the same ratio by mass.

As we continue this process, starting with any substance, we eventually reach a stage
at which the new substances formed cannot be further broken down by chemical means.
The substances at the end of this chain are called elements.

An elementis a substance that cannot be decomposed into simpler substances by
chemical changes.

For instance, neither of the two gases obtained by the electrolysis of water — hydrogen
and oxygen — can be further decomposed, so we know that they are elements.
As another illustration (Figure 1-9), pure calcium carbonate (a white solid present in
limestone and seashells) can be broken down by heating to give another white solid (call
it A) and a gas (call it B) in the mass ratio 56.044.0. This observation tells us that cal-
cium carbonate is a compound. The white solid A obtained from calcium carbonate can
be further broken down into a solid and a gas in a definite ratio by mass, 71.528.5. But
neither of these can be further decomposed, so they must be elements. The gas is iden-
tical to the oxygen obtained from the electrolysis of water; the solid is a metallic element
called calcium. Similarly, the gas B, originally obtained from calcium carbonate, can be
decomposed into two elements, carbon and oxygen, in a fixed mass ratio, 27.372.7. This
sequence illustrates that a compound can be broken apart into simpler substances at a
fixed mass ratio; those simpler substances may be either elements or simpler compounds.

Figure 1-9 Diagram of the decomposition of calcium carbonate to give a white solid A
(56.0% by mass) and a gas B (44.0% by mass). This decomposition into simpler substances
at a fixed ratio proves that calcium carbonate is a compound. The white solid A further
decomposes to give the elements calcium (71.5% by mass) and oxygen (28.5% by mass).
This proves that the white solid A is a compound; it is known as calcium oxide. The gas B
also can be broken down to give the elements carbon (27.3% by mass) and oxygen (72.7%
by mass). This establishes that gas B is a compound; it is known as carbon dioxide.

14 CHAPTER 1: The Foundations of Chemistry


pure calcium carbonate

white solid A

56.0% by mass 44.0% by mass

72.7%
by mass

27.3%
by mass

28.5%
by mass

71.5%
by mass

gas B

calcium oxygen carbon oxygen
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